Thursday, May 29, 2014

What is better than nine wins in a row? Well, I'd say nine wins in a row which include series sweeps of both the Boston Red Sox and that pesky team from Tampa Bay that always seems to have Toronto's number would be better.

The Jays swept Tampa for the first time since August 6 - 9 2010.

When I sat down to write this, I started to recap the series in Tampa game by game. But you all know where to find the box scores and have all either watched the games, seen the highlights, or read the box scores. So let me just touch on some real positive signs from this series.

First and foremost: This team is never out of it. When I had the chance to talk Blue Jays with Eric Rosenhek of Definitely Not Jays Talk a few weeks ago, he asked me what were some positive things I liked about this team. I told him that I really liked that this team never seems to be out of ball games. Their offense this year is that good. In fact, it is reminiscent of the 1993 team that was also never out of the game, some days despite their pitching. The first two games against Tampa was another testament to that. On Monday the Jays put up ten runs on sixteen hits and on Tuesday another nine runs on thirteen hits, with six home runs over those two games. The Jays are a very exciting offensive team to watch. Even in times when they are trailing late in the game, we all stay glued to our screens because we know that on any given night in any inning, this team can come back and still win the game. Even if its a bunt and an over throw that get the job done.

Second: Edwin Encarnacion is an absolute monster right now. He now has 14 home runs in the month of May and in his last twelve games, he's batting .340 with two doubles, 10 homers and 15 RBIs. After a slow start that had people worried (which it shouldn't have, traditionally he starts slowly. In fact, a few seasons ago it was this day, May 29, that he hit his first homer of the year) he has really come into his own this month. Like him or not, Edwin is a lot of fun to watch right now. If you do like him, then hurry up and get voting to get this guy into the MLB All-Star game. He is not even close to a start at either first base or DH. He needs your votes.

One last thing: Liam Hendricks. Two starts and two solid outings from this young man thus far. I know last night the twitter feed was abuzz with folks saying that he wasn't fooling anybody. Well that may have been the case, but even if it was he once again got the job done. Through his two starts he is 1 and 0 with a 2.31 ERA and a 0.771 WHIP with 8 K's and 3 walks over 11 and 2/3 innings. I will still stand here and tell you that this team NEEDS more starting pitching to continue to threaten down the stretch. But any time you can get performances like this from guys like Hendricks it is a huge boost for this club. They are going to need outings like this from him and probably other guys down on the farm to make it to October baseball this fall.

The Jays will try to match last seasons ten game winning streak when KC comes into Toronto for a four game series over the weekend. R.A. Dickey and James Shields tonight. Should be a fun one!

I will be watching, or at least paying attention once again from Arizona.

- Rob

James Shields is 6 and 1 against Toronto over the last three seasons and has been very tough for some of the Blue Jays better hitters. Melky Cabrera is just 5 for 27 lifetime against Shields. Jose Reyes is 2 for 10 and Edwin Encarnacion just 6 for 29. Jose Bautista may be the man to watch tonight. He is 9 for 29 with 4 HR vs Shields over his career. Hopefully his success continues and contributes to another Toronto win.

Monday, May 26, 2014

Last month I wrote “Why This Year Was the Best Shot For the
Blue Jays…. & How They Blew It”.I
implied in that article that if the Blue Jays had pitching, they would
win.Well, turns out when the Blue Jays
get good pitching, they win.Period.Six solid starting pitching performances in a
row and they’ve won six straight.Not
only have they won six straight, they did it against the Boston Red Sox and the
team that held the best record in the Majors coming into Toronto in the Oakland
Athletics.The starting pitching over
the past week has been pretty good.

Over those six wins, Toronto’s starting pitching has gone 37.2
innings giving up 10 earned runs and striking out 29 while walking 11.However if you take out Happ’s start at the
beginning of that streak and look at the last five starts, then you have 33.2
innings pitched, 6 earned runs, 23 strike outs and 9 walks.That’s an era of 1.60 over those last 5
starts.What has been even more of a
positive sign than the rotation however has been the bullpen.When this bullpen is not overworked, it is
effective.Over these last 6 games,
Toronto’s bullpen has thrown 14.1 innings (approx 2.1 ip per game on average) and
has allowed 5 earned runs, with 10 strike outs and just 3 walks.Which looks even better when we take out
Esmil Rogers, who is no longer with the club.Without Rogers, the bullpen pitched 14 innings and allowed just 2 earned
runs.Over that six game span.What is also encouraging:1 hr allowed by the bullpen in 14 innings pitched
at Rogers Centre.

When the pitching is present, this team will win.The problem is, I still don’t think we have
enough starting pitching to get us through the season.We got a great performance from Hendriks and
hopefully he can build on that. But he
is young and we should expect some regression from him.Also don’t forget that Hutchison isn’t going
to be able to pitch all year.One year
removed from Tommy John, they will need to shut him down at some point.

I know it sounds like I’m playing a broken record or beating
a dead horse here, but I really wish that Anthopoulos had delivered on his
promise of more starting pitching in the offseason.If we had one or two more arms in this
rotation right now, I feel The Jays would be in a much better position to keep
fighting to stay atop the AL East.

What we need to do as Jays fans, is hope that this team is
still in top spot come deadline day.Then maybe they will get something done to bring in at least one more
arm.I just hope we still have enough
trade chips still to get something accomplished at the deadline.I think it’s safe to say that we are no
longer going to get Jeff Smardzija from the Cubs for just Stroman and Sanchez.
Not with the year Smardzija and Stroman have each had respectively.

Toronto hopes to get to seven in a row when Tampa Bay comes
to town tonight.Hutch gets the ball for
Toronto and Tampa will counter with Canadian native Erik Bedard.

Here’s hoping that the pitching can keep it up.Because watching this team win sure is a lot
of fun.

- Rob

Navan Ontario native
Erik Bedard has been having a bit of a bounce back season this year with Tampa
Bay and is having a great month of May.In four starts he has 2 wins and one loss allowing only 2 earned runs
over 23 innings with 18 K’s.As someone
who follows all Canadian born players in MLB, I am excited to see him pitching
so well.Having said that, I hope he
isn’t too good tonight.;)

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Wednesday July 7, 2010. A hot, muggy summer day. Toronto was under an extreme heat alert. The Minnesota Twins were in Toronto for a three game series with the Blue Jays. After losing the first game 7-6 on Tuesday night, the Jays were looking to Marc Rzepcynski to even the set at a game a piece. Minnesota countered with Kevin Slowey. But despite Toronto coming away with the win that day, nobody really remembers that game for the box score.

Canadian Justin Morneau was in the midst of possibly the best season of his MLB career. In 81 games he had 102 hits, 25 doubles, 18 home runs (going into that game, he was just three behind Jose Bautista) and was hitting to the tune of a .345 average. He was on pace to meet or surpass his season that won him MVP honours in 2006 (The first Canadian to win the AL MVP)
and had already been voted in as the starting first baseman for the AL All Star squad. However on that day his stellar season (and career to that point) came to a screeching halt.

It was the eighth inning. Minnesota was down by a run. Michael Cuddyer was at the plate for the Twins with nobody out and Morneau at first base. Cuddyer hit a ground ball to a back peddling Alex Gonzalez who quickly got the ball to McDonald to force Morneau at second. Justin slid in hard to second. As he should have. As anyone would do in an attempt to break up the double play. He was successful. John McDonald jumped over Morneau to throw the ball to first and Cuddyer beat the off line throw easily. However when McDonald jumped, Morneau was coming in so fast he slid through the bag at second. His head hit McDonald's knee as McDonald was attempting to clear him.

Justin suffered a concussion that caused him to miss the rest of the 2010 regular season and the playoffs. He returned in 2011 but was reduced to playing in only 69 games. Over that span he batted just .227 with 4 home runs. Well below his career numbers. 2012 and 2013 were marginally better. In 2012 Justin was able to play 134 games, posting a .267 batting average and hitting double digit home runs (19) for the first time since that 2010 season. 2013 marked the last year of his contract with the Twins. As a result Justin was dealt on August 31 to the Pittsburgh Pirates in exchange for Alex Presley and a player to be named later. (On October 5 that player was named as Duke Welker.) The Pirates appeared to be playoff bound for the first time since 1992 and were looking to add a bat to help put them over the top. After batting .259 in Minnesota with 17 home runs, Morneau unfortunately did not bring what the Pirates were hoping for. He debuted in Pittsburgh on September 1, wearing number 66 and playing first base. Through 77 at bats as a Pirate, Justin hit .260 with 4 doubles, 3 RBI's and no HR's. I'm sure not what he or the Pirates were expecting.

Even though he was three and a half seasons removed. Justin had never been able to get back to his pre concussion form. Justin was granted free agency on Oct 31, 2013.

I've been a Justin Morneau fan since he broke into the league. I have always followed him closely (as I tend to do with all of our Canadian born players) while he was a Twin and whenever he represented team Canada in the World Baseball Classic. I have been rooting for him and hoping that he would at some point get back to where he used to be for one more season or two before his career is over.

I know it's early. Heck, it's barely May. But it appears that this year may finally be that year.

On December 1, 2013 Justin Morneau was signed by the Colorado Rockies to replace their long time first basemen Todd Helton, who retired at the end of the 2013 season after spending his entire career in Colarado. The contract is a two year deal worth $11.75 million dollars and carries a mutual option worth $9 million for 2016. Maybe it's the mountain air. Maybe a change of scenery. Maybe the National League. Maybe batting between Troy Tulowitzky and Wilin Rosario. Who knows? But whatever it is Justin seems to have found his stroke again.

As I said, it's early. But through 30 games so far, Morneau is batting .339, with 6 HR's, 9 doubles, and 24 RBI's. That would put him "on pace" for a 32 HR, 129RBI season if you believe in that sort of thing. This appears to be the best stretch that he has put together since that day in July of 2010.

I am very hopeful that this is a sign of the year to come for Morneau. That he is finally going to bounce back and put together a monster season that will put him back on top and have him back in the conversation amongst analysts when they discuss the year's top performers. But more importantly, that he is finally healthy and feeling 100% again. Enjoying both baseball and life to their fullest extents.

As of today Justin Morneau is the top performer among Canadian players in Major League Baseball this year. Perhaps this might be the year Joey Votto (who I am also a big fan of) might have a threat to end his streak of Tip O'Neill awards. The Tip O'Neill award is handed out annually by the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame to a Canadian Baseball player, or players who are "judged to have excelled in individual achievement and team contribution while adhering to the highest ideals of the game of baseball." Morneau has won the award in before in 2006 and 2008. Votto is the current Tip O'Neill award winner and has won the award for four straight years (although he and Jon Axford shared the award in 2011. The third time the award has been awarded to co-winners). How great would it be if both of these Canadian first basemen put together a good season and were neck and neck when it's time for the Canadian ball hall to choose its winner for 2014?
Oh, and by the way. Watch out for those Rockies. With a record of 19 and 13, they are currently one game out of first place in the NL West behind the Giants and half a game up on the World Series favorite Dodgers. There are some good things happening out in Colorado this year. They're definitely worth checking out if you're surfing around MLB.TV some day looking for a game to watch.

Keep an eye on Morneau. I definitely will be.

- Rob

Justin Morneau was born on May 15, 1981 in New Westminster, British Columbia. He was drafted in the third round of the 1999 amateur draft by the Minnesota Twins. He made his MLB debut with the Twins at age 22 on June 10, 2003 against coincidentally the Colorado Rockies. Morneau went 2 for 4 from the clean up spot in his first game.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

The rain has been falling in KC tonight, but we're still going to see a game. Sportsnet 590 the fan is reporting that the Jays and Royals game will get underway at 8:35 ET.

Some good news from Buffalo tonight, Marcus Stroman pitched 6 innings of no hit ball. Allowing one walk and striking out 10 on 80 pitches. Apparently only one ball was hit out of the infield all night.

If you're a Jays fan like I am, then you can answer the following question handily. Where were you when you heard about the Florida Marlins trade? Well? Where were you? You know exactly where you were. As do I. I was sitting in Pizza Hut having dinner with my family, when my phone started going absolutely bananas. In a span of about ten minutes I was receiving non stop text messages, emails, BBM messages and even a phone call from friends asking if I'd heard about the deal. What did I think? Was this the deal that would put Toronto over the top? Have the Blue Jays finally got a legitimate shot to contend for a play off spot in the American League East?

For the first time in many years this country was buzzing about baseball. In November nonetheless. Even the players were fired up.

Jose Bautista told Sportsnet's Shi Davidi: “My level of confidence as an athlete has just been quadrupled and I don’t say that lightly. I mean, it’s the honest truth”

Catcher JP Arencibia tweeted: "Fired up this is really happening.. More fuel to the fire to be the
best!! Also hearing about season ticket sales. Guess fans are ready too!"

Alex Anthopoulos was deemed a genius. The wonderboy.

Then in December, he added R.A. Dickey. In just two transactions AA had seemingly turned over three fifths of a starting rotation that won 73 games in 2012.

Then 2013 happened.... Josh Johnson (whom I never had faith in) was a short lived disaster. Morrow was what we've accustomed to Morrow being in the Blue Jays rotation (absent). Dickey and Buerhle both struggled in the first half, and to cap it off Happ was hit in the head by a line drive and was injured while falling from the impact. Couple the starting rotation woes with Reyes getting injured opening day, Bautista, Rasmus and Lawrie all missing significant amounts of time and Melky having more serious health issues... Not to mention Arencibia being a minor media fiasco, talking and playing his way out of the organization. (I'm still not sure that was the right move.) We arrive at the recipe for what happened last season.

Heading into last off season, Anthopoulos had some lofty goals to improve and solidify the Jays for the 2014 season. Starting with the rotation. No pun intended.

On the day of the final game of the season last year Anthopoulos reasserted the organizations intentions of adding a front line pitcher either through trade of free agency. Then, during a television broadcast, he acknowledged that the Blue Jays would be bidding for Masahiro Tanaka.

Anthopoulos also said the club planned to improve at second base, upgrade their "catching situation" and possibly look for a left fielder.

In December, with the winter meetings looming, the Blue Jays signed Dioner Navarro to be their starting catcher.

Prior to the winter meetings, Anthopoulos had his annual meeting with the Toronto chapter of the Baseball Writer's Association of America. At which he told them that he was no longer optimistic he'd be able to upgrade his club's starting rotation via free agency. He did tell them however, that he had targeted three starting pitchers he was attempting to acquire via trade. "As the prices in free agency sit today, I'm not optimistic. But that could change. We're definitely having dialogue in trade. I wouldn't say that we're necessarily close, but we're having active dialogue. Where that leads to, I don't know yet." Even in December, the priority was still to upgrade the rotation. With honorable mention going to bringing somebody in to compete with Ryan Goins for the second base job.

The rest of the off season came and went... Nothing happened. Well, unless you count Chris Getz as the guy competing with Goins for the second base job that is.

The most exciting day of the off season for me was the day that Sportsnet 590 the FAN sent out an email saying that the Jays had signed Ervin Santana to a one year deal worth $14 million. However we all know now that this was a false report.

Ok, so now that we have reviewed the non happenings of this past off season, please pass me my soap box.

Alex Anthopoulos has completely contradicted himself this year. Following the 2013 season Anthopoulos showed his cards when the Jays made the trade with the Marlins and acquired R.A. Dickey from the Mets in the span of a just a few weeks. In doing so he had pushed his chips to the middle of the table and went all in. Giving up significant prospects and bringing in veteran upgrades in an effort to be a contending team right now is something I will always get behind provided there are pieces already in place, which there were. I supported him 100%.

Here is where we differed. After the abysmal 2013 season, Alex said that they didn't just build this team for one year, they built it to be a contender for the span of 3 or 4 years. Then he took a very passive aggressive approach to the 2014 off season. I believe this was all wrong.

Let me begin with the passive aggressive off season, and I will come back to the statement that the team was built to contend for not just one or two years.

This team needed starting pitching. Period. There were not enough guys to provide enough innings to get through this season. I believe Drew Hutchison is going to be a great starting pitcher, but he JUST had Tommy John surgery. How many innings can he really throw this year? Brandon Morrow is in a similar situation. The last time he threw more than 55 innings was in 2012 and he has only pitched over 150 innings one time in his entire major league career. That leaves you with Dickey, Buerhle and..... Happ? McGowan? Romero? Redmond? Rogers? Drabek (cough)? Stroman? What was the plan here? Throw the pasta at the wall and hope that some of it sticks? I know that Anthopoulos said that he was planning on adding starting pitching. In fact if I remember correctly he originally said a front line starter as well as a second, back end rotation guy. He did neither of these. He says he had deals in place but he wasn't comfortable with the price.

Here's the thing. Once you've gone all in you don't get to flip your cards back over and pull back your chips. That luxury is gone. I don't care if you're not comfortable with the price. If you have the chance to bring in a starter that can help this rotation, you do it. You can't claim that you don't want to mortgage the future, because you already have. Alex traded significant farm hands last off season. If Jeff Samardzija is the best that you can get and you have to give up Stroman and Sanchez to do it, then you do it. No, Samardzija is not worth Stroman and Sanchez. However if that is all you can get done then you get it done. This team is not built to contend for years. The majority of the impact players are not under contract after the 2015 season. (not including club options) Rasmus, Lind, Morrow and Melky are in the last year of their contracts. Bautista, Encarnacion, Dickey and Buerhle are finished after next season. Next season we are realistically looking at a starting outfield of Sierra, Anthony freakin Gose, and Bautista! If that doesn't scare you a little it should. After 2015 we could have no first basemen, no DH, we'll still have no second basemen and who knows what the rotation will look like?

If I haven't lost you yet and you're actually still reading this you are probably thinking: "But Rob, aren't these reasons why you shouldn't trade Stroman and Sanchez?" NO! They're prospects. We can get prospects back! As I said, you have significant guys coming off of their contracts. So lets say that Anthopoulos actually finished what he started and stayed all in. My definition of staying all in would have involved two things. Number one you trade Sanchez and Stroman and bring someone in. We'll use Samardzija because we already know he was on the table. You add Samardzija and you give Ervin Santana the four year $50 million dollar deal he was looking for. Never mind this crap where you thought you had a one year deal in place for $14 million but Santana backed out. Of course he did Alex. What pitcher in their right mind (a fly ball pitcher nonetheless) wanting a one year deal with the hopes of landing a lucrative multi-year deal afterward chooses a home run park in one of the traditionally toughest divisions in baseball? NOBODY! Of course he accepted the same deal from Atlanta. What you should have done was just given him four years at 12.5 million per like Santana wanted. I firmly believe that he would have taken this deal if offered from Toronto. He didn't opt for Atlanta because he didn't want to play here. He opted for Atlanta because it was a one year deal. If Toronto had offered him the money he was looking for, he would have taken it. Everyone knew what his price was. I don't think he would have been overly picky about who gave it to him. Especially with so many of his Dominican Republic comrades already playing in Toronto.

NOW Alex, you are all in. Now you have Dickey, Buehrle, Santana, Samardzija and Morrow. Morrow may have been replaced by Hutchison by now, if Hutch didn't win the spot outright in spring training. You just solidified your rotation. But not only have you solidified your rotation, you have also bolstered the bullpen by adding McGowan and either Morrow or Hutchison in long relief roles.

We already know this offense can hit. Not only can they hit, they are healthy this year. They scored 8 runs on 16 hits one day last week and lost. As it stands, the Jays record is at 12 and 13 despite having lost 7 games in which they scored 4 or more runs. Their rotation has not been good and their bullpen is already overworked. If we had Samardzija and Santana in the starting rotation right now, I am willing to bet that the Jays would have won at least 4 of those 7 games. Especially considering the leads that they obtained in those games before blowing them later on. That would put us at 16 and 9. All hypothetical of course.

If Alex had stayed the course from last year and gotten these two deals done we would have officially mortgaged the farm. But we also would have been legitimate contenders this season. The rest of the division is not bulletproof. The Yankees
have holes. The Red Sox have holes. The Rays have had significant
injuries to their pitching staff, but no one could have seen that
coming. This is why I believe this year was the best shot for the Blue Jays. The state of the division combined with the amount of players they are losing after this season and even more that could be free agents after 2015 reasserts to me that 2014 could have been the year of the Blue Jays.

Let's say that Anthopoulos had done these things and they worked out. We made the playoffs, maybe even won the Pennant or the World Series. If that had happened, no one would have minded that Stroman and Sanchez were gone.

If he had done these things and they hadn't worked out. Say two or three of the starters got injured. Maybe some of the offense was hurt and the team fell behind. Then you still have assets. Good, moveable assets that can bring you back more prospects. Colby, Melky, Bautista and Encarnacion would get you good young pieces back. Lind might bring something. Dickey is probably moveable. Buehrle might be to the right team at the deadline next year. Had they signed Santana, I am confident that they could have moved him as well after year two of his contract. You are never "screwed" as long as you have assets. I believe that the Blue Jays are rich enough in assets that they could have completely mortgaged the farm, gone for it and if it didn't work out, still been able to re-mortgage the farm. Remember, when Alex Anthopoulos first got to Toronto he took this organization's farm system from being down in the lower third of the league, to fourth. It has been done before and it can be done again.

Instead Jays fans are stuck with the current situation. They do not have enough pitching to get through this season, which is going to lead to an overworked bullpen and more frustrating losses. But that is probably not where the frustration will end this season. Lets face it, if Toronto is at .500 or below come the all star break, the fire sale is going to start... Then where are we going to be next season? I don't believe that the Blue Jays will pay Melky the money he is going to command at the end of this season. I also don't believe that Rasmus is interested in re-signing after this year. But I have been wrong before.

Fasten your seat belts folks... It's going to be a bumpy ride.

- Rob

Prospects are made to be traded. If you're interested in hearing
more of my take on prospects, please read my previous post from December 2012 "Do Jays Fans Overvalue Prospects?"

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Well, we've all heard by now that the Blue Jays are apparently close to making a deal with the Mets for current NL Cy Young winner R.A. Dickey.

There haven't been many particulars of the trade that have leaked out, however the speculation (according to Andy Martino of the New York Daily News) is that the Blue Jays are willing to include Gose and d'Arnaud in the deal.

Normally I would assume that because we have heard about this that there is probably no truth to it. We all know that the "Silent Assassin" works in the shadows. However, there are other reports suggesting the Jays have been reviewing Dickey's medical information since yesterday. So maybe there is some bite to this one. Hard to say at this point.

The general reaction that I've seen on twitter is that Jays fans are either extremely for, or avidly against acquiring Dickey. There doesn't seem to be much middle ground. The one point that does seem to keep re-occuring though, is that Jays fans do not want to give up Travis d'Arnaud.

This to me is astounding.

I've always been surprised at how attached Jays fans can tend to get to their prospects before ever having seen them play at the Major League level. I'm not disputing that all signs point to d'Arnaud being a franchise player. I am also not contesting that on paper Gose and d'Arnaud appear to be guys that could help your team for 10 plus years if you're able to retain them. But we don't know that, and we won't know that for a few years to come.

Maybe its me. Maybe I'm jaded when it comes to prospects because I still remember Eddie Zosky, Derek Bell and Howard Battle. How they were going to be the next "franchise guy". Not one of the three worked out.

But if I am jaded, as a Jays fan, I do have good reason to be.

I could sit here and post draft results to you. Show you that a lot of first round picks, actually first overall picks even, that never saw the light of day in the major leagues. I'm not going to do that though. The draft is a long way away from the majors. Instead, I took a look at some top 100 prospect lists from over the years. This hit a little closer to home.

In February of this year Baseball America's top 100 prospects list has Travis d'Arnaud ranked at #17, and Anthony Gose at #39. Both are very highly thought of players. Those are are respectable rankings. However the Jays have had this before. Derek Bell was #15 on the list in 1992. Eddie Zosky was #22, and Mark Whiten #25 in 1991. If you're looking for a higher ranking, Jose Silva was #10 in 1994. Not one of these four really even had a career in the majors.

In 2000 Vernon Wells was #4, Alex Rios was #6 in 2004. Both of these guys are everyday players sure, and they have had good seasons. But could anyone really argue that they lived up to their potential and projections? I don't think you could. As much as I like the guy and feel for him as a player, Wells is about to become the highest paid bench player in history.

Other Jays players to crack the top 100 that you've probably heard of include: D.J. Boston, Angel Martinez, Marty Janzen, Gabe Gross, Josh Phelps, Billy Koch, and Guillermo Quiroz to name a few.

In 2006, the top 10 Blue Jays prospects heading into that season were as follows:

Of that list, I think we have to acknowledge Romero, Lind, Janssen, and League as successes. The other six, well, you can make your own decision.

There are two sides to every argument. Obviously the Blue Jays have had prospects crack the top 100 that have panned out. That list includes but is not limited to Carlos Delgado, Shawn Green, Alex Gonzales, Shannon Stewart, Roy Halladay, and Chris Carpenter.

Jays fans need to relax. If the rumours are true and d'Arnaud and Gose are included in the deal, I can almost assure you there are more pieces coming back. I suspect it will be another large Anthopoulos deal that includes 8 players or more before the final icing is on the cake. Alex has been after Jonathan Niese from the Mets for a while. You can bet that he's at least brought his name up in the discussions.

The only point I'm trying to make is that no matter how close they are to the majors and how much potential they have, prospects are just that. Prospects. R.A. Dickey is a commodity. If a team is in a position to be a contender, I am always in favour of trading prospects for a commodity. Prospects are replaceable. Don't forget that Johnson's contract is up this year and Melky has two. If the Jays aren't competing, they can deal guys like these for prospects at the deadline. If the Jays are competing you probably won't miss d'Arnaud, Gose, or the players given up in the Marlins deal anyway.

I believe that the best shot the Jays have to win with this team, is right now. Especially with Josh Johnson only having one year left on his deal. Veterans like Reyes, Beurhle, Encarnacion and Bautista, though under contract for a few more years, aren't getting any younger. R.A. Dickey helps this team win, right now. The acquisition of Dickey would give them a rotation (in no particular order) of Morrow, Johnson, Buerhle, Romero and Dickey. Keeping J.A. Happ and any other pieces they acquire that could potentially start, in the bull pen. Giving them lots of insurance against injuries. After last year I think we all agree that you can never have enough pitching.

Whether the Dickey rumours are true or not, I think 2013 is going to be a great season. I firmly believe that Alex will bring in another starting pitcher before opening day. If it is Dickey, great. If not, then maybe we get to keep Gose and d'Arnaud, and all this fuss was over nothing.

What should we the fans do in the meantime? Sit back and enjoy the ride. This is the busiest offseason we have experienced as Jays fans in a long time and the Jays sure are getting media attention south of the border.